Cheney is banking on there being no power in his lifetime that will bring him to account
'I'd do it again!' Cheney defends CIA torture, calls interrogators heroes
RT,
16
December, 2014
Former
VP Dick Cheney expressed no regret over CIA torture techniques
employed against detainees in the “war on terror,” even as a
judge considers forcing the White House to release the remainder of
the damning photos.
Cheney
was apparently unfazed by the cruel accounts of torture techniques
performed by the CIA at various foreign “black sites” as
described in the Senate Intelligence Committee’s lengthy
investigation.
"I'd
do it again in a minute," Cheney
told Meet the Press's Chuck Todd on Sunday.
The
former vice president, who critics say exerted a disproportionate
amount of influence inside of the Bush administration, recalled those
horrific moments on the morning of 9/11 to defend America’s use
of“enhanced
interrogation techniques” to
get information from detainees.
"Torture
to me…is an American citizen on his cell phone making a last call
to his four young daughters, shortly before he burns to death in the
upper levels of the Trade Center in New York," he
said.
Far
from suggesting punishment for the interrogators, Cheney believes
they are worthy of praise for their controversial actions.
"I'm
perfectly comfortable that they should be praised, they should be
decorated," he
declared.
At
the same time, Cheney remained adamant when reminded that at least 26
of 119 detainees were cleared of any links to terrorist
organizations.
"I'm
more concerned with the bad guys that were released than the few that
were, in fact, innocent," he
said, while mentioning that the individual who went on to lead the
Islamic State [IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL], Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, was
incarcerated by the US military in Iraq before being set free in
2004.
In
addition to the torture technique known as water boarding, which
creates the sensation of drowning, Todd pressed Cheney on other
lesser-known practices, including the treatment of detainee Abu
Zubaydah, who was placed in a coffin-size confinement box for a total
of 266 hours (11 days, 2 hours) over a 20-day period, as well as
forced to remain in a small confinement box (21 inches wide, 2.5 feet
in length) for 29 hours.
Another
detainee had one or both wrists handcuffed to an overhead bar that
would not allow him to lower his arm for 22 hours each day for two
consecutive days in order to “break
his resistance.”
When
questioned about so-called rectal feeding, which at least five
detainees were purportedly subjected to, Cheney said it was part of
the approved program and probably administered for "medical
reasons."Todd
challenged Cheney on that account, saying his explanation contradicts
the Senate report findings, which says there was no medical need for
rectal hydration in the detainees.
Despite
the harsh public backlash over the program, the number two man in the
Bush administration remains convinced that the CIA interrogation
program helped the United States to protect itself from future
terrorist attacks on the homeland. "It
worked, it absolutely worked," Cheney
said, while going on to slam the report, saying it was “seriously
flawed.”
“They
didn’t talk to anybody who knew anything about the program; they
didn’t talk to anybody who was in the program.”
Cheney
defended the CIA’s approved methods of interrogation, saying US
soldiers could expect far worse in the event they are taken prisoner.
Reuters/Kevin Lamarque
Cheney
also hit back at the report's finding that former President George W.
Bush was unaware of the program’s details, saying the Republican
leader "knew
what we were doing, he authorized it, he approved it."
Meanwhile,
the Obama administration is said to be sitting on many more
photographs detailing detainee abuse at the hands of the United
States military.
Some
photographs show US troops “posing
with corpses; others depict US forces holding guns to people’s
heads or simulating forced sodomization,” the
Daily Beast reported.
The
White House faces a Friday deadline to submit to a federal court its
argument as to why more photographs of detainees being tortured
should be prevented from being released into the public realm.
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